-Jamal Murray and Emmanuel Mudiay both possess excellent size for players that can run the point. Among point guards taken in the first round of the NBA draft that appear in our measurements database, both players would rank among the top-6 tallest on record. Though they don't neccessarily share many similarities in terms of style of play, Mudiay is just marginally smaller and lighter than former Portland star Brandon Roy who measured 6'6.25" in shoes with a 6'8" wingspan at 207 pounds.

-Inglis looks like a grown man at first glance, and the 18 year old Frenchman lives up to that impression on paper. No small forward in our database that weighs 240 pounds or more has a wingspan on par with Inglis's. His closest match physically may be LeBron James, who stood 6'8 in shoes and weighed 245 pounds with a 7'0.25" wingspan before the 2003 draft. Inglis's wingspan is the same as that of Rudy Gay and Kawhi Leonard. The young small forward is a unique physical specimen.

-Towns has a one of the top-15 standing reaches in the history of our database. As it stands, he is already bigger than Pistons big man Greg Monroe was coming out of Georgetown. Monroe measured 6'11 in shoes with a 7'2.25" wingspan and 247 pounds.

-Lyles's measurements are similar to those of countryman Andrew Nicholson who measured 6'9.5" in shoes with a 7'4" wingspan at 234 pounds in 2012. Lyles's combination of length and strength are unique for a player his age.

-Shang has a mature frame for a player his age. Unlike some of the skinnier big men who have come out of the FIBA Asia region in the last decade, Shang's 220 pound frame is above the NBA average for small forwards that have been drafted.

-Francis doesn't stand out in any one measurement historically, but has a ready-made college frame that should help him contribute as Florida when his skill set allows him to see the floor for Billy Donovan's program.